T
Thierry H. Pham
Researcher at University of Mons
Publications - 99
Citations - 948
Thierry H. Pham is an academic researcher from University of Mons. The author has contributed to research in topics: Recidivism & Psychopathy. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 90 publications receiving 852 citations. Previous affiliations of Thierry H. Pham include University of Southern Denmark & Metz.
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Journal ArticleDOI
International Perspectives on the practical application of violence risk assessment : a global survey of 44 countries
Jay Singh,Sarah L. Desmarais,Cristina Hurducas,Karin Arbach-Lucioni,Carolina Condemarin,Kimberlie Dean,Michael Doyle,Jorge Oscar Folino,Verónica Godoy-Cervera,Martin Grann,Robyn Mei Yee Ho,Matthew Large,Louise Hjort Nielsen,Thierry H. Pham,Maria Franscisca Rebocho,Kim A. Reeves,Martin Rettenberger,Corine de Ruiter,Katharina Seewald,Randy K. Otto +19 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that violence risk assessment is a global phenomenon, as is the use of instruments to assist in this task, and improved feedback following risk assessments and the development of risk management plans could improve the efficacy of health services.
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Evaluation of the SORAG and the Static-99 on Belgian sex offenders committed to a forensic facility.
Claire Ducro,Thierry H. Pham +1 more
TL;DR: The SORAG and the Static-99 were moderately correlated with each other, and both showed strong predictive validity for general and violent recidivism (ROC AUC's ranging from .68 to .72 for the total sample).
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Selective attention and executive functions deficits among criminal psychopaths
TL;DR: This paper examined whether psychopaths exhibit deficits in selective attention and executive functions and found that psychopaths' abilities to maintain a plan and to inhibit irrelevant information were inferior to those of control participants.
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Decoding of facial expression of emotion in criminal psychopaths
Thierry H. Pham,Pierre Philippot +1 more
TL;DR: While criminal nonpsychopaths did not differ from criminal psychopaths in term of overall accuracy, they were less accurate for amygdalian emotion than for nonamygdalian ones, and this pattern of results is opposed to the Blair's Amygdalian hypothesis.
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The crossmodal facilitation effect is disrupted in alcoholism: A study with emotional stimuli
TL;DR: This first evidence for a crossmodal deficit in alcoholism contribute in explaining the contrast observed between experimental results describing, up to now, mild impairments in emotional facial expression (EFE) recognition in alcoholic subjects.